After almost a year and a half since its last release, a double-entry version of the KMyMoney personal finance management software for KDE is now available. Version 0.6 supports multiple account types, including credit cards, cash, savings, loans and mortgages.

An easy-to use GUI allows entering and viewing your financial data. Adjustable homepage can be customized and wizards guide the user through more complicated transactions. Transactions can be entered in an easy-to-use checkbook type form, or edited directly in the register. Recurring transactions can be scheduled and transactions can be split to multiple categories and accounts. All transactions can be listed for a given payee. We have also implemented powerful search functions to find transactions.

While older versions saved data in a binary data format, Version 0.6 writes its data in a compressed XML format, which makes it easy to preserve and store financial data. Also, the software supports the import and export of QIF files, allowing users to move data to/from external sources. Users can customize the QIF profile, to be able to import files which may not be standard, without making any code changes.

Additional features being considered for future releases include multiple currency support, investment account support, financial report generation, OFX support, online stock quote updates, HBCI, and a GnuCash import function. Please feel free to see more details on the project web-site. Some of these functions are already available in our current CVS repository.

Well, to be honest, we are a bit behind gnucash at this point. They already support most of the features that we are talking about for our 0.8 release. However, from our users, we have heard comments such as our interface is easier to use, they like that you can export your accounts into qif files (you can't in gnucash), and that it is lighter-weight than gnucash.

We want to get up to the level of gnucash someday, and hopefully surpass it eventually.

I hope about 6 months from now we should be releasing a new version, however that guess is not from any consensus of our team, just my guess. We are hoping soon to generate some preview releases to show the work we have done so far in 0.8, and hopefully gain some feedback on the usability of those new features. Keep checking in on our website for any news about this.

HBCI support would be very cool indeed.
I would trust a non-proprietary app much more for
online banking. I know there are some HBCI solutions
for Linux right now but they are Gnome (i.e Interface
sucks) and quite complicated. I did not really dare to
try them. I fear they might transfer ¤1M to Bill Gates...
In my opinion HBCI is the way to go for online banking anyway.
Much better than to force some stupid web interfaces on the users.
HBCI gives us back the freedom to choose the GUI we want for banking.
BTW: Many banks do not like to give you HBCI because it is considered
much more secure and if something goes wrong they will have to proove
it's not their fault. If sth. goes wrong with ordinary online banking
YOU will have to prove you did nothing wrong. But if you insist they
will give you an HBCI account eventually.
If you can always choose a bank which does HBCI via chipcard - not
via disk. It's far easier and more secure. If you in addition use
Linux (and I sure hope you do ;-) ) you can feel pretty safe to
do online banking - isn't that great? Right now I use Matrica which
comes packaged with SuSE. Nice app but a bit non-standard. And it
wants to install only as non-root which is a major no-no for a
banking app IMHO.

I would think there might be a way to hook into the PIM tools that are a part of KDE, and extract out the expense data. That would definetly be a nice feature for us to have. We'll take it into consideration.

I have been a user of Quicken for many many years.
It is the only app that I use on a regular basis that requires some form of MS Windows: either dual boot or Wine.
I have been trying to replace it.
I don't do anything all that weird with it. All I do is keep track of my checkbook and bills. I don't need hardly any of the other features. Quicken 99 works just fine for me...except for MS Windows:(
The feature that I like the most about Quicken that I would really like to see in open source alternatives is a good calendar. Maybe there could be a way to link this into KOrganizer in some way?
If it exists please let me know.
In Quicken I use the calendar to do most of my work. All of my scheduled transactions shows up in the calendar and I can see when I need to pay bills. I like seeing the calendar it puts thing into a perspective that I can see better than just a list of scheduled transactions.